Bangkok Post

Confrontin­g journalism’s misogynist­ic trolls

Online abuse of female journos is not well-known because many play it down, writes Hannah Storm

- Hannah Storm is Director of the Internatio­nal News Safety Institute.

Before the internet revolution­ised how news was gathered and shared, journalist­s rarely had to worry about the threat of virtual violence. The main risks they faced were in the field: the physical and psychologi­cal safety concerns of reporting on disaster and conflict. But today’s media battlefiel­ds are increasing­ly shifting online, and more than ever, it is women who are coming under fire.

According to Demos, a UK-based think tank, female journalist­s are three times more likely than their male counterpar­ts to be targeted by abusive comments on Twitter, with perpetrato­rs frequently using sexualised language (such as “slut” and “whore”) against their targets. In 2016, the Organisati­on for Security and Cooperatio­n in Europe published research showing that women working in the media were internatio­nally and disproport­ionately targeted by gendered threats, noting that the abuse had “a direct impact on their safety and future online activities”.

The threats of violence against women working in the media often extend to family members also, and the intimate nature of the attacks, received on personal devices outside the profession­al parameters of the newsroom, also heightens the impact. Here we see the blurring of virtual, physical, and psychologi­cal frontlines of safety.

While this digital vitriol is not new, the misogynist­ic tenor is clearly deepening. Unless media executives begin to take these trends seriously, the voices of women journalist­s could be silenced.

Another way in which women journalist­s are frequently targeted online is through the underminin­g of their work or reputation. Already, there is evidence that women are self-censoring and holding back from writing about certain issues, specifical­ly rights-based issues and those affecting marginalis­ed communitie­s. But, by doing this, the voices of the vulnerable are also silenced.

To be sure, some women are fighting back against the violence and refusing to let the trolls win. Alexandra Pascalidou, a Swedish-Greek journalist who has experience­d threats online and offline for her work covering human-rights issues, has spoken openly about her experience­s and has even publicly forgiven one of the neoNazis who ran a campaign of abuse against her. Speaking at the News Xchange media conference late last year, Ms Pascalidou described it as her “duty” to bring attention to the abuse she and other female journalist­s regularly endure. “What we need is more people like us,” she said. “As soon as we are few, it is easier for them to scare us.”

Maria Ressa, a former CNN war correspond­ent, is equally outspoken. The founder and CEO of Rappler.com, an online news organisati­on in the Philippine­s, she has been the target of a campaign of sexualised harassment since 2016. Ms Ressa has lost count of the number of death threats she has received and says none of her previous experience­s covering physical conflict could have prepared her for the scale of the violence directed toward her and her Rappler colleagues.

But she is fighting back with a strategy that could well serve as a blueprint for media leaders who recognise the severity of online harassment. Among the tactics, she has used are investigat­ive journalism to identify her abusers, and she has publicly called on social media platforms to do more to counter abuse and acknowledg­e the psychologi­cal impact it has on victims.

Unfortunat­ely, most female journalist­s bullied online are less willing to challenge their accusers. For many, fear of reputation­al or even physical harm has created a culture of shame that discourage­s a strong, dignified response.

This reticence is understand­able; after all, there is some truth to the argument that engaging trolls only feeds the fires of online hate. But by staying silent, targets and their supporters are essentiall­y victimised twice — first by their attacker’s words and actions, and second by the powerlessn­ess to respond. It’s an old-fashioned form of gendered power dynamics updated for the digital age.

Most female journalist­s I know admit to self-censoring their online engagement. Many more have abandoned social-media platforms like Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram altogether, despite pressure from bosses to remain “connected” to audiences. For already-establishe­d female journalist­s, this digital distancing may not be such a big deal. But for female journalist­s at the start of their careers, the decision to renounce social media carries profession­al and reputation­al risks. Simply put, online abusers are forcing women in the media to make impossible choices.

Despite evidence that some media executives are moving toward improving gender equality, many are not giving online harassment the attention it deserves. When I discussed this issue with several senior, predominan­tly male industry leaders, most were shocked to hear that their female colleagues felt so threatened in the digital space. Worse, the executives lacked adequate answers about how to address the problem.

The lack of awareness is partly due to the way women minimise their online experience­s; many worry that speaking out will somehow negatively affect their job status. For example, one female colleague told me that she didn’t want to make a fuss about a harassing post she had received because it was “only” a threat of rape — not a death threat like the one a friend had received. Another colleague did not think her experience of digital violence would be taken seriously because it had not happened in the “real world”.

We cannot blame women for feeling this

way, but we can demand more from the executives responsibl­e for their journalist­s’ safety and security. At the moment, most media organisati­ons are failing to tackle the problem, and if that results in more women leaving the industry altogether, journalism will become more skewed toward male perspectiv­es than it already is.

Traditiona­lly hostile news environmen­ts — like war zones — have, for obvious reasons, drawn the bulk of sympathies from the public and media executives; raising the alarm about online harassment is not meant to diminish the dangers that journalist­s in these circumstan­ces face. And yet, as any female journalist know, digital combat leaves scars, too. If women are to navigate the industry’s virtual frontlines without injury, they must not be expected to go into battle alone.

It is our duty to raise awareness of the abuse. If only a few do so, it is easier for them to scare us. ALEXANDRA PASCALIDOU SWEDISH-GREEK JOURNALIST

 ?? EPA ?? Maria Ressa, founder and CEO of Rappler.com, joins a demonstrat­ion in the Philippine­s. She has been the target of a campaign of sexualised harassment since 2016.
EPA Maria Ressa, founder and CEO of Rappler.com, joins a demonstrat­ion in the Philippine­s. She has been the target of a campaign of sexualised harassment since 2016.

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